Structural variability of human chromosome 9 in relation to its evolution
- 1 January 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Human Genetics
- Vol. 31 (3) , 247-262
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00270855
Abstract
Human chromosome 9 shows a high susceptibility for structural rearrangements, particularly pericentric inversions, which often are transmitted. Three types of pericentric inversions can be observed on No. 9: 1) Type I, showing the total constitutive heterochromatin in the short arm. 2) Type II with part of the C heterochromatin on the short arm, the rest located on the long arm proximal to the centromere. 3) Type III: a subtelocentric chromosome with part of the C heterochromatin in the very short arm and the rest located interstitially on the long arm. With these inversions as well as with other structural rearrangements, e.g. translocations, the break-points are located preferentially within the C heterochromatin or close to the heterochromatic-euchromatic junctions. These findings are in contrast to the findings in lymphocytes from 5 patients with Fanconi's anemia and after irradiation in vitro, reported in the literature. In lymphocytes break-points seem to be distributed more or less by chance. These observations together led us to speculate that human chromosome 9 primarily was an acrocentric chromosome; in morphology and at least in some functions similar to D-and G-group chromosomes. During evolution this acrocentric chromosome changed to a submetacentric one due to a pericentric inversion.This publication has 65 references indexed in Scilit:
- Evidence for an inverse relationship between X-ray induced chromatid and chromosome breakage in human chromosomesHereditas, 2009
- Distribution of mitomycin C induced breaks on human chromosomesHereditas, 2009
- Partial 9 trisomy by 3:1 segregation of balanced maternal translocation (7q+; 9q-).Journal of Medical Genetics, 1975
- Trisomy for the short arms of chromosome 9 in two generations, with balanced translocations t(15p+;9q−) in three generationsThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1974
- The sites of radiation induced-breakage in human lymphocyte chromosomes, determined by quinacrine fluorescenceMutation Research - Fundamental and Molecular Mechanisms of Mutagenesis, 1973
- Nonrandom distribution of chromosome breaks in Fanconi’s anemiaCytogenetic and Genome Research, 1973
- Chromosome-exchange Aberrations in Human LymphocytesInternational Journal of Radiation Biology and Related Studies in Physics, Chemistry and Medicine, 1967
- The Sites of Nucleolus Formation in Human Pachytene ChromosomesCytogenetic and Genome Research, 1964
- The association of satellited chromosomes with specific chromosomal regions in cultured human somatic cellsAnnals of Human Genetics, 1963
- The Sites and Relative Frequencies of Secondary Constrictions in Human Somatic ChromosomesCytogenetic and Genome Research, 1962